Category Archives: writing life

Chow Nominated for Global E-Book Award

Chow has been accepted into nomination for a Global E-book Award. The Global Ebook Awards honor and bring attention to the future of book publishing: Ebooks. Now in its second year, the Awards are in 72 specific categories. They are open to all publishers large and small so that a winner is the best in its category not just the best of small or regionally-published ebooks. Most ebooks are also available as printed books as well. The awards ceremony will be in gorgeous Santa Barbara on August 18, 2012.

Chow is an excerpt from Hudson’s unpublished collection of essays recounting her career of 32 years in the Army Reserves. An Army moves on its stomach but combat rations only go so far for so long and a Soldier has to find something else to eat. From mess halls to mess kits, Chow chronicles one Soldier’s inventiveness and adventure in food while deployed in wartime. A small snapshot into what many never think about – what’s to eat?

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Gems from the San Francisco Writers Conference 2012

Michael Larsen, co director of the San Francisco Writers Conference and Writing for Change Conference, is posting select handouts from this year’s sold out San Francisco Writers Conference on his blog site. This is a great way to see some of the useful and informative topics presented, especially if you’re wondering about attending for the first time. Postings include Feedback on the Page: How to Give Feedback in a Writing Group from my workshop with Tanya Egan Gibson, Penny Warner’s 7 Perfect Places to Write, Jeevan Sivasubramaniam’s 7 Questions for Preparing a Proposal and more.

For an interesting perspective on the panel discussion at this year’s conference “Being a Change Agent, Writing for a Better World” read this blog post by The Writer Magazine staff writer E. Abbe Can Books Change the World?

Want a taste of the conference presentations? Check out the San Francisco Writers Conference Teleseminar Series and listen to talks from Joan Gelfand, Alan Rinzler, Chris Soth, Kevin Smokler, Michael Larsen and Elizabeth Pomoda and others.

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The value of Subject Matter Experts

In 2007 while a Fellow at the Lambda Literary Emerging Writers Retreat, one of the Retreat events was a panel discussion with publishers and editors. I asked a question about the future of self publishing and across the panel, the agreement was that for serious authors, the traditional route would remain the way to go if you wrote anything besides poetry, which has a long history of self publishing. Listening to publishers and editors the last few years at the San Francisco Writers Conference, self publishing has become a viable, honorable, non-self-indulgent method towards becoming published. A sea change over these five years.

I first explored self publishing with Chow,  an excerpt from Weekend Warrior, Dispatches from the Army Reserve, a future collection of narrative essays from my 32 years of service. Using Smashwords, I attempted to do all the work myself and swiftly accepted that in terms of cover design, I could spend the time to learn the software or I could spend less than $100 bucks and hire out. I had a design in mind and using the free list of recommended designers Smashwords will provide I found a great one, Joleen Naylor. I took the photo for the cover, described the concept I had in mind and Joleen put that concept into reality.

I chose to do the internal formatting of the text myself. Smashwords gives you all the direction needed, if heeded, no problem. But it took time. I’m pretty handy with word, I did learn a few things after reading the Smashwords style guide that made taking the time to read the style guide well worth the investment.

When I moved on to No Red Pen: Writers, Writing Groups & Critique, and actual complete work that I wanted to get into print. I got help again. Joleen again took the concept I had in mind, and the photos I shot and turned the idea into an excellent cover. (The photo is of the actual manuscript after I received it back from editing.)

With internal book design, again, I realized I was out of my depth if I wanted a good, professional product. There is also a world of difference between design for e-book publishing and design for print publishing.

For the initial print run, I chose a digital print company, 360 Digital Books, Using their recommendation list I choose book designer Patricia Rasch. For a few hundred dollars, Pat made sure that my internal formatting met the requirements for 360 to offset print, she also tweaked the cover files for the digital print press and turned my word document into the proper format for a create space printing.

Why, you may ask, would I do both a short run via a digital press and a create space print? Excellent question. I wanted to have copies on hand for the SF Writers Conference where I was presenting a workshop with Tanya Egan Gibson on writers groups and critique. I didn’t think I’d get things through create spaces process fast enough. Create space also solved distribution for me by putting the book up on Amazon.

Would I do the same next time? Another good question. No, but that is a different blog post.

Many self publishing authors seek to do as much as they can, if not all, themselves. That is admirable, and in my mind, not good use of an author’s time. First, I’m not a design expert, internal or cover, so paying someone to accomplish better what I would have to take time to figure out frees me up for what I want to do more, which is write. Second, in becoming my own publisher, I take on the responsibility to meet the standards of the publishing industry. That means a well done, professional product. When you look at my self-published book, and hold it up against any other book, there should be nothing that screams “SELF PUBLISHED BOOK”.

Ensuring I publish a quality product means I need one other type of professional help – editing and proofing. That’s where I went wrong. I did have professional editors, though I did not hire them as they were friends that volunteered to provide edits. They did good work and I still should have hired a copy editor to catch the dozen or so small details that both them and I missed. When the proofs came back, again, I should have had someone else, someone that had not read the work hundreds of times (like I had), someone not intimately familiar with all the incarnations of the work (me, the author), someone with patience to read the copy word for word, line for line, (not me the tired of looking at this author). Because I did not get that level of help, I have hundreds of “uncorrected proof” copies.

Moral of the story – yes, you can produce a product all by yourself. But why do that, when for really not a whole lot of money, less than $1000 all told, you can ensure a quality, professional product by contracting out with some subject matter experts (SME). Together, you and those SMEs will ensure a quality, meet or exceeding professional standards, product – the book.

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Self Publishing – Easy Peasy!

For the past several years, I and author Tanya Egan Gibson have presented a workshop on writer groups and critique skills at the San Francisco Writers Conference. After last year’s conference, I decided to turn the handouts and information into an actual book. I completed the draft and wanted print copies available for the participants. A good self publishing project I thought. I can do it. So I did. What I found out is self publishing is not as easy as I thought, it is a relatively straight forward process, and there are some pitfalls to look out for. Here’s the top 5 lessons learned: 1. You can never proof too many times. 2. Get help. 3. Controlling price is important. 4. Who owns the ISBN is the publisher. 5. Consider distribution up front, not after printing. And I’ll just say it again – Proof the work before printing.  

Right now, I’ve about 600 “uncorrected proof” copies of No Red Pen: Writers, Writing Groups, & Critique. Half have a table of contents that is not accurate because when a last minute addition of pages was made to improve the internal design, neither the designer nor I remembered to check that the TOC file updated. Point one to inexperience – when I think editing and proof reading, I think of content, not front matter. Well, now I know.

And that other half – well, they have about a dozen errors that are typo or consistency of word choice issues. I should have caught them in the final copy editing or when reviewing the final proof before printing. But I didn’t. I didn’t because I had looked at the work so many times, I failed to really LOOK at the work when reviewing the proof.

Lesson learned.

What will I do with the 600 copies of the book I won’t sell now because of errors? Those will be distributed to attendees the next time I do a workshop on critique, as “uncorrected proof” copies.

Coming up in the next post – Get help.

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Entry for LitStack Flash Fiction Challenge #5

Roses and Water Lilies

The crinoline felt scratchy on her skin. Funny how the warm stone made her feel like she had to pee. She’d heard them calling for her but since she wasn’t supposed to ever be near the pond, this would be the last place they’d look. Each time the breeze shifted, a waft of fragrance from the water lilies drifted across her face.  Faint bubbling was the background but she wasn’t sure what that sound was from. In the beginning, when she first started sneaking off to sit near the water, the rustling and scratching in the bushes scared her. It sounded so loud on the quiet spring mornings.

“What’s that?” She whispered, startled.

“Just the birds, little miss. There’s a nest of barn sparrows and some doves are rustling in the rose hedge around the pond.”

“I didn’t know you were here.”

“I know. Come along now, you know you aren’t supposed to be here.”

“Please, let me stay. Don’t tell.”

The tall, gangly boy looked down at the little girl. He looked around for a moment and then sighed.

“Okay. But promise me you won’t go any closer to the water. You’ll stumble into the roses and the thorns will get you or fall into the water, and I know you don’t know how to swim yet.”

“I never get to feel the grass on my toes.”

Mac noticed the little white socks with black across the top and the pink shoes against the deep green grass. Mary Jane socks, he remembered had been his sister’s favorites. Mom had to take them when she was asleep to get them into the wash. They were the same age, Little Miss and her. Or would have been.

“The air will feel cooler near the water,” he said.

Mac had crunched away across the dry summer grass. He never bothered her when she was able to escape to this place. She knew he managed to always work his way around nearby though. He never said anything to her again but she knew he was near. He hummed softly when he worked and sometimes, along with the scent of roses and lilies, she could smell tantalizing garlic and onion. She knew it was from him when he’d been working hard.  She wondered what he ate to smell so that it sometimes just made her hungry.

She heard steps along the walk. She sighed. This was the last time she’d sit here like this.

Goodbye, she thought.

“Claire!”

She looked up towards her mother, the sun warm upon her face as she did so.

“Come along. Time to go.”

Claire took her mother’s hand and walked slowly with her. She stopped and turned back towards the scent of rose and water lily. She didn’t see Mac shade his eyes to watch her walk away. She didn’t see him start to wave, then drop his hand.

“Come along sweetie. Let’s go get those new eyes.”

She’d never see her favorite place this way again.

//…//

Roses and Lilies was entered at LitStack in Flash Fiction Challenge #5. Visit the site to see the prompt and find links to other entries. 

Photo by Daphne Bahamonde

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Read an E-Book Week at Smashwords!

A little late,  but through tomorrow, you can find great free and reduced e-books at smashwords in celebration of Read an E-Book Week. This includes a free copy of my recently released No Red Pen, if you use coupon code REW75. What are you waiting for? Check it out here!

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Feedback

Over at Hubpages, I’ve posted a new hub which is an excerpt from No Red Pen. This is from the chapter on how to give feedback on the page. When part of a writer’s group, everyone reads the work of fellow members. What do you do with that piece of writing and how do you deliver the feedback? Find out at http://vickihudson.hubpages.com/.

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SF Writers Conference Done

The San Francisco Writers Conference for 2012 is done and it was four days of well invested time towards developing my writing career. Tanya Egan Gibson, Author of How to Buy a Love of Reading, and I once again led a workshop on Writing Groups and Critique. (If you haven’t read Tanya’s book – Get it! How to Buy a Love of Reading is a page turner, can’t put down read.) This year’s conference was even more exciting for me as No Red Pen – Writers, Writing Groups & Critique was published as e-book and in print and I received the advance copies Friday at the conference. Everyone that attended the workshop received a free advance copy. For those that missed the conference (see you next year), until March 15, 2012, you can download a free copy of No Red Pen – Writers, Writing Groups and Critique via smashwords using the coupon KL78N. Find copies where ever e-books are sold.

Once again, the poets rocked the house with several well attended small workshops, a great reading by the faculty with music, and late into the night open mike. This is an after-hours event that is absolutely the place to be on Saturday night of the conference.

Following the conference, I attended the San Francisco Writers University sponsored Self Publishing Bootcamp with industry leaders Carla King, Brian Felsen, Joel Friedlander, and Dean of SF Writers U,  Laurie McLean. A well spent day! Wish I’d taken the class before I embarked on the self-publishing trail.

Now the hard work of post conference recovery, follow up on all those contacts, and use that renewed energy the conference always creates to boost productivity. There are submissions to get sent out!

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No Red Pen – Writers, Writing Groups & Critique is Now Available!

No Red Pen – Writers, Writing Groups & Critique is now available via smashwords

Everyone has a story. No one else can tell your story. The process of creating, refining and ultimately releasing it into the wild that is publication in the world needs to be a respectful one. No Red Pen – Writers, Writing Groups & Critique is not an overview of writing groups – it is a manifesto for a different paradigm for workshopping and critiquing.

No Red Pen – Writers, Writing Groups & Critique is intended for those writers looking for information on what to consider when forming or joining a writers’ group and for writers seeking tools for critiquing work in progress. This is not a how-to book for writers’ groups. There is no discussion of specific craft techniques. There are other books in the market that discuss finer points of writers group administration and many that deal with craft. This book is intended to help the reader make informed choices in the marketplace of writing group workshops and provide useful skills for critique consumers. The act of entrusting one’s written work and exposing that product of imagination, heart, and soul to the criticism of others is a risky and brave action by the writer and a privilege for the reader. No Red Pen – Writers, Writing Groups & Critique provides a toolbox for conducting a writers’ workshop and recommendations for critique that fundamentally respects the writer and the work.

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Self-Publishing Basics – Resource

While surfing around educating myself on self-publishing, I found the Self-Published Author’s Lounge blob, which included a very helpful page with publishing basics. In five minutes I answered several questions that had developed from my web surf inquiry. Additionally, as I read comments, tutorials and blog posts recognized several names of authors I’ve read, or heard at conferences of on other sites. This gave a little legitimacy to a site found out of the blue. If you too are looking for some answers with self-publishing, here are a few spot on posts that are sure to help. Self-Published Author Lounge

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